Teaching Reading Strategies in the School Library
By (Author) Christine Walker
By (author) Sarah Shaw
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Libraries Unlimited Inc
30th November 2004
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Language learning: reading skills
428.4071
Paperback
160
Walker and Shaw link the teaching of ten commonly taught reading strategies such as sequencing, compare and contrast, and prediction to newly published picture books. Each chapter of the book explains a strategy, furnishes a graphic organizer with which to teach it, and an in-depth modelled discussion of how to use the strategy with two or three books. Additionally, each chapter furnishes an annotated bibliography of other books that would lend themselves easily to the teaching of this strategy. The book is written particularly for the use of teacher librarians who are being asked to support reading instruction as part of the instructional programme in their library (as opposed to the usual programme of literary appreciation, reading motivation etc), but are not given long periods of time to work with students. These lessons are quick and self-contained. Each lesson comes with reproducible templates to make laminated graphic organizers that can be used again and again with various books to teach each of the ten strategies. Primary school teachers would also find this book useful. Links commonly-taught reading strategies to books Contains clip-art and other reproducible resources
[T]his well-conceived work can be a useful tool for school library media specialists who have programs for teaching reading in their libraries.-Booklist/Preofessional Reading
This well-organized book offers readily accessible reading strategies that librarians can teach while sharing favorite literature with K-3 students. Ten research-based techniques are organized into four topical chapters that focus on prediction, retelling, comparing/contrasting, and comprehension....This is quick and easy, fast and fun support for reading skills.-School Library Journal
"This well-conceived work can be a useful tool for school library media specialists who have programs for teaching reading in their libraries."-Booklist/Preofessional Reading
"[T]his well-conceived work can be a useful tool for school library media specialists who have programs for teaching reading in their libraries."-Booklist/Preofessional Reading
"This well-organized book offers readily accessible reading strategies that librarians can teach while sharing favorite literature with K-3 students. Ten research-based techniques are organized into four topical chapters that focus on prediction, retelling, comparing/contrasting, and comprehension....This is quick and easy, fast and fun support for reading skills."-School Library Journal
Christine Walker and Sarah Shaw are both elementary school library media specialists for Olathe, Kansas, public schools.